Fendi SHW 2-Way Bag, Calfskin Leather, Purple — Japan (multi-city: Tokyo, Osaka, Kyoto, Hiroshima, Nagasaki) — NOT FOR SALE

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Bag (brand, model, color):

Fendi SHW 2-Way Bag, Calfskin Leather, Purple

• Connection to place (why this destination fits the bag):

Sourced through a Japanese luxury resale seller. Japan is a global fashion resale hub, especially for Fendi. Purple has cultural resonance in Japan (associated with nobility and spirituality), making it a symbolic fit.

• Destination (country):

Japan (multi-city: Tokyo, Osaka, Kyoto, Hiroshima, Nagasaki)

• Airport(s) + nonstop option from Chicago (ORD/MDW) (airlines/routes):

• ORD → HND (Tokyo Haneda) nonstop (ANA, JAL, United)

• Return from Fukuoka (FUK) or Nagasaki via Tokyo HND/NRT

• Season & weather window (best months; typical highs °F/°C):

• April (cherry blossoms, 60–70°F / 15–21°C)

• October (clear skies, 65–75°F / 18–24°C)

• Beach/body of water (name) & distance:

• Odaiba Seaside Park (Tokyo Bay, 30–40 min from HND)

• Enoshima/Kamakura beach (1 hr from Tokyo)

• Nagasaki Bay waterfront

• Hotel (examples & nightly rates):

• Tokyo – The Peninsula Tokyo ($550–750) / Park Hotel Tokyo ($250–350)

• Osaka – Conrad Osaka ($400–600) / Cross Hotel ($200–300)

• Kyoto – Ritz-Carlton Kyoto ($700+) / Hotel Granvia Kyoto ($250–350)

• Hiroshima – Sheraton Grand Hiroshima ($250–350)

• Nagasaki – Hotel New Nagasaki ($200–300)

• Estimated total trip cost (flights + hotels, 2 people, 14 nights):

$9,500–$12,500 (economy flights ~$3,000–4,000; hotels ~$6,500–8,500).

• Backup nearby option:

If Kyoto or Osaka fully booked → stay in Kobe (30 min from Osaka, bayside city).

• Fashion/brand tie-ins on trip:

• Fendi boutiques: Ginza (Tokyo), Osaka Umeda

• Omotesando & Ginza luxury rows in Tokyo

• Japanese craft tie-in: Kyoto silk & Nishijin weaving (luxury textile heritage)

• Food plan (signature spots; 2–4 picks per city):

• Tokyo: Sushi Kyubey (Ginza), Tempura Kondo, Ichiran ramen

• Osaka: Dotonbori street food, Mizuno okonomiyaki, Kuromon Market

• Kyoto: Kaiseki at Gion, tea ceremony in Higashiyama, Nishiki Market

• Hiroshima: Okonomiyaki Mitchan, oysters near Hondori

• Nagasaki: Champon noodles, Castella cake, Dejima waterfront dining

• Itinerary (14 days):

Days 1–3: Tokyo — Ginza shopping (Fendi flagship), Meiji Shrine, Shibuya, Omotesando, Odaiba Seaside Park, Tsukiji outer market, sumo or teamLab Planets.

Days 4–6: Osaka — Dotonbori lights, Osaka Castle, Kuromon Market, Umeda Sky Building, day trip to Nara (giant Buddha + deer park).

Days 7–9: Kyoto — Golden Pavilion (Kinkaku-ji), Arashiyama bamboo forest, Fushimi Inari Shrine, Gion at night, Nishiki Market.

Days 10–11: Hiroshima — Peace Memorial Park, Atomic Bomb Dome, Hiroshima Castle, Miyajima Island (floating torii gate).

Days 12–13: Nagasaki — Glover Garden, Dejima, Peace Park, Nagasaki Bay waterfront.

Day 14: Return via Tokyo — Flight back ORD.

• Risks/notes:

• Book trains via JR Pass (7–14 day pass recommended).

• Cherry blossom season = crowded hotels; book 6–12 months ahead.

• Summer = humid + typhoon risk; autumn is most stable.

• Many spots close early (9–10pm). Carry some yen.

TOKYO

Tokyo (4 days total)

Connection to bag

Tokyo is Japan’s fashion capital — Ginza Six, Omotesando, Shibuya. The purple Fendi matches the city’s mix of luxury refinement (imperial, Ginza) and vibrant pop culture (Harajuku, Shibuya neon).

Day 1 — Arrival & Bay Views

• Check-in: The Peninsula Tokyo (Ginza, $550–750/night) or Park Hotel Tokyo ($250–350, art-themed).

• Afternoon: Walk to Hibiya Park & Imperial Palace gardens for a relaxed start.

• Evening: Head to Odaiba Seaside Park (Tokyo Bay, Rainbow Bridge views).

• Dinner: Waterfront dining in Odaiba or izakaya in Shimbashi.

Day 2 — Ginza Luxury & Fendi

• Morning: Explore Ginza Six, visit the Fendi flagship — bag’s homecoming.

• Lunch: Sushi at Kyubey (classic Ginza sushi-ya).

• Afternoon: Shopping stroll through Omotesando (architecture: Prada, Dior, Fendi).

• Evening: Sunset cocktails at Andaz Tokyo Rooftop.

• Dinner: Tempura Kondo (Michelin-star tempura).

Day 3 — Pop Culture & Old Tokyo

• Morning: Shibuya Crossing and Hachiko statue → purple bag photo with neon backdrop.

• Lunch: Harajuku crepes or ramen at Afuri (yuzu shio ramen).

• Afternoon: Meiji Shrine (contrast purple bag with vermilion torii + forest paths).

• Evening: Asakusa & Senso-ji Temple — Nakamise shopping street.

• Dinner: Yakiniku dinner at Nikutei Futago (grilled wagyu).

• Night: Explore Golden Gai in Shinjuku — tiny retro bars.

OSAKA

Osaka (3 days)

Connection to bag

The bold purple color reflects Osaka’s lively, neon-lit nightlife and street culture. The SHW (silver hardware) pairs with the city’s modern architecture and futuristic vibe.

Day 1 — Arrival & Nightlife

• Check-in: Conrad Osaka (modern skyline views; ~$400/night)

• Afternoon: Explore Shinsaibashi-suji Shopping Street (boutiques + Fendi store for a “sister bag” visit).

• Dinner: Mizuno in Dotonbori — iconic okonomiyaki.

• Night: Neon stroll along Dotonbori Canal, photos with the purple bag under the Glico Man sign.

Day 2 — Castles & Street Food

• Morning: Osaka Castle — bag photo op with purple leather against historic golden crests.

• Lunch: Kuromon Ichiba Market — takoyaki (octopus balls), grilled wagyu skewers.

• Afternoon: Osaka Aquarium Kaiyukan — walk the circular tanks together.

• Dinner: Matsusakagyu Yakiniku M — premium wagyu beef (reserve in advance).

• Night: Rooftop bar at Harukas 300 for city views.

Day 3 — Day trip or theme park

Option A

• Universal Studios Japan (Harry Potter, Mario Kart)

• Carry the purple Fendi crossbody for fun, functional theme park photos.

Option B

• Day trip to Nara (40 min train) — deer park + Todai-ji Great Buddha.

• Lunch: local persimmon leaf sushi.

• Dinner back in Osaka: Kani Doraku (giant crab restaurant with moving claw sign).

Food plan (Osaka highlights)

• Street eats: okonomiyaki, takoyaki, kushikatsu skewers.

• Upscale: wagyu yakiniku, kaiseki.

• Desserts: matcha parfaits, fluffy souffle pancakes.

Risks/Notes

• Osaka is busier on weekends — book restaurants early.

• USJ needs express passes for rides (buy online in advance).

• September weather: 75–85°F (humid; bring breathable fabrics).

KYOTO

Kyoto (3 days)

Connection to bag

Purple has deep meaning in Japan, symbolizing nobility, spirituality, and refinement — all of which are embodied in Kyoto’s temples, geisha districts, and imperial history. The bag fits perfectly against golden temples and traditional kimonos.

Day 1 — Temples & Gardens

• Check-in: Ritz-Carlton Kyoto (luxury riverside, $700+/night) or Hotel Granvia Kyoto ($250–350, central).

• Morning: Kinkaku-ji (Golden Pavilion) — purple bag photo against the golden temple reflected in the pond.

• Lunch: Yudofu (tofu hotpot) near Nanzen-ji.

• Afternoon: Ryoan-ji Zen Garden (stone garden minimalism).

• Dinner: Kaiseki dinner at Gion Karyo (multi-course seasonal cuisine).

• Evening: Walk through Gion (geisha district, lantern-lit streets).

Day 2 — Arashiyama & Nishiki Market

• Morning: Train to Arashiyama → stroll through the Bamboo Grove with the purple bag for contrast shots.

• Late morning: Visit Tenryu-ji Temple and its gardens.

• Lunch: Riverside soba or tempura along Katsura River.

• Afternoon: Return to central Kyoto → Nishiki Market food crawl (matcha mochi, grilled eel skewers, soy donuts).

• Dinner: Modern kaiseki at Hyotei (Michelin, if available).

• Evening: Night walk through Pontocho Alley — narrow riverside dining street with atmospheric lanterns.

Day 3 — Shrines & Tea Culture

• Morning: Fushimi Inari Shrine — iconic red torii gates; the purple Fendi pops beautifully against the vermilion paths.

• Lunch: Fushimi sake district tasting (optional).

• Afternoon: Traditional Tea Ceremony in Higashiyama (wear yukata/kimono if desired).

• Dinner: Tempura dinner near Kiyomizu-dera.

• Evening: Stroll Kiyomizu-dera Temple at sunset for panoramic city views.

Food plan (Kyoto highlights)

• Kaiseki dining — multi-course haute cuisine (Gion, Hyotei).

• Matcha sweets — parfaits, mochi, soft serve.

• Tofu & vegetarian cuisine — Buddhist shojin ryori near temples.

• Market foods — skewers, mochi, pickles at Nishiki Market.

Risks/Notes

• Kyoto is extremely popular in April (cherry blossoms) and November (autumn leaves) → must reserve hotels early.

• Many temples close by 5:00 pm — plan early starts.

• Taxis can be hard to get in peak seasons → use IC cards for trains/buses.

HIROSHIMA

Hiroshima (2 days)

Connection to bag

The purple Fendi reflects Hiroshima’s dual identity — a city of remembrance and resilience transformed into a symbol of peace and cultural strength. The silver hardware mirrors the modern city built around deep history.

Day 1 — Memory & Renewal

• Check-in: Sheraton Grand Hiroshima (next to JR station, ~$250–350/night).

• Morning: Hiroshima Peace Memorial Park & Museum — Atomic Bomb Dome, Children’s Peace Monument. Carry the bag subtly here (respectful environment).

• Lunch: Okonomimura — Hiroshima-style layered okonomiyaki with noodles.

• Afternoon: Stroll Hondori Shopping Arcade — fashion + local boutiques.

• Dinner: Fresh oysters (Hiroshima is Japan’s oyster capital) — try Ekohiiki or a waterfront oyster bar.

• Evening: Walk along the Motoyasu River at night, bridges lit softly.

Day 2 — Miyajima Island

• Morning: Train + ferry (~45 min) to Miyajima (Itsukushima Shrine).

• Iconic floating red torii gate → purple bag photos against vermilion gates & sea.

• Feed deer, hike or cable car up Mt. Misen for views.

• Lunch: Grilled oysters & momiji manju (maple-leaf cakes).

• Afternoon: Explore Daisho-in Temple before ferry back.

• Dinner: Casual izakaya in Hiroshima Station area.

• Evening: Relax with sake tasting near the station.

Food plan (Hiroshima highlights)

• Hiroshima okonomiyaki (layered, with soba/udon).

• Fresh oysters — grilled, fried, raw.

• Momiji manju sweets.

• Local sake (Hiroshima Prefecture is a major sake-producing region).

Risks/Notes

• Peace Museum can be very emotional; allow quiet time afterward.

• Miyajima ferry may be affected by tides/weather → check ahead.

• Spring & autumn = best weather (65–75°F / 18–24°C). Summer humid, winter mild.

NAGASAKI

Nagasaki (2 days)

Connection to bag

Nagasaki’s history as Japan’s most international port city (Dutch, Portuguese, Chinese influences) makes it a cultural mosaic. The purple Fendi represents that blend of refinement and global openness.

Day 1 — History & Waterfront

• Check-in: Garden Terrace Nagasaki ($300/night, hilltop views) or Hotel New Nagasaki ($200–250, near station).

• Morning: Dejima — former Dutch trading post; European-style streets.

• Lunch: Try Champon noodles (hearty local dish, Chinese-inspired).

• Afternoon: Glover Garden — hillside Western-style mansions, harbor panoramas (bag photo op with bay view).

• Dinner: Waterfront dining in Dejima Wharf, fresh seafood.

• Evening: Mount Inasa night view — one of Japan’s “top 3 nightscapes.” The purple Fendi with city lights = perfect photo.

Day 2 — Peace & Culture

• Morning: Nagasaki Peace Park & Atomic Bomb Museum — solemn sites honoring history.

• Lunch: Local Castella sponge cake & coffee (Portuguese legacy).

• Afternoon: Sofukuji Temple or Confucius Shrine (Chinese heritage).

• Dinner: Fusion izakaya near Chinatown — mix of Japanese + Chinese flavors unique to Nagasaki.

• Evening: Stroll Meganebashi (Spectacles Bridge) lit at night over the Nakashima River.

Food plan (Nagasaki highlights)

• Champon noodles (hearty ramen-style soup with seafood/pork).

• Castella cake (Portuguese sponge).

• Sara udon (crispy noodles with toppings).

• Chinatown specialties.

Risks/Notes

• Terrain is hilly; use trams or taxis for longer walks.

• Weather milder than Tokyo/Kyoto — 70–78°F (21–26°C) in spring/autumn.

• Peace Park & Atomic Bomb Museum can be emotionally heavy — pace the day.

Final Day — Farewell Tokyo

• Morning: Leisurely stroll at Tsukiji Outer Market → fresh sushi breakfast.

• Afternoon: teamLab Planets Tokyo (digital art, immersive, great with the bag).

• Dinner: Easy ramen or tonkatsu near hotel.

• Evening: Airport transfer → depart HND nonstop ORD.

Food plan (Tokyo highlights)

• Sushi (Kyubey, Tsukiji Market).

• Tempura (Kondo, Tsunahachi).

• Ramen (Ichiran, Afuri).

• Yakiniku (wagyu beef).

• Café culture (Omotesando Koffee, Blue Bottle Aoyama).

Risks/Notes

• Tokyo is huge — use Suica/PASMO IC cards for seamless trains.

• English menus widely available in major areas.

• Peak seasons (April, Oct) require early bookings for restaurants & hotels.

Hirosaki, Japan – April 23 2018: Full bloom Sakura – Cherry Blossom at Hirosaki park, one of the most beautiful sakura spot in Tohoku region and Japan
Fujiyoshida, Japan at Chureito Pagoda and Mt. Fuji in the spring with cherry blossoms.

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